Identifying bed bugs

The first step in addressing a bed bug infestation is making
sure that you are actually dealing with bed bugs. Bed bugs are small, brownish insects. They’re about 1/8 of an inch long, the
size of an apple seed. They are distinguished from other similar insects by
their very flat backs, lack of wings and reddish-brown color after feeding. The
flat backs become bloated in bed bugs that have fed. Bed bugs don’t jump but
they can crawl quickly, about as quickly as an ant. Michigan State University Extension has partnered with the Michigan Department of Community Health to address the bed bug issue.

After
hatching from an egg, bed bugs go through five developmental stages before
molting to an adult. They require at least one blood meal at each stage. Adults
will feed about every three to seven days if a suitable host is available.
Females require a blood meal in order to produce eggs. Females who have mated
produce three to five eggs per day, totaling 100-500 eggs in her lifetime.
Adult bed bugs live for six to nine months but under ideal conditions may live
for more than a year. Adults can also survive without feeding for up to a year.

Bed
bug eggs are white, oval shaped and about the size of a grain of rice. Clusters
of 10-50 eggs can be found in crevices. Once they hatch they look like adults,
except they are colorless and smaller. They must have food within several days
of hatching or they die. In ideal conditions they will reach maturity in about
five weeks. It is possible to find eggs, young and adults in the same place.

For information on how to prevent or treat bed bug
infestations, visit the Michigan Department of Community Health website, www.michigan.gov/bedbugs